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报告题目 | On Option Greeks and Corporate Finance | ||
报告人(单位) | 张国平教授(西安交通大学) | ||
点评人(单位) | 刘晓星教授 (东南大学) | 点评人(单位) | 尹威副教授 (东南大学) |
在线会议信息 | 2020年9月18日下午4:00; 腾讯会议ID:469 279 991;入会密码:200918 | ||
报告人简介 | |||
张国平教授是西安交通大学金禾经济研究中心、教授、博士生导师。 Dr. Chang, Kuo-Ping is a professor at the Jinhe Center for Economic Research, Xi’an Jiao Tong University. He graduated from University of Pennsylvania with a Ph.D in economics and finance. He has authored four books, and published various papers in prominent journals such as Management Science, European Journal of Operational Research, Journal of Regulatory Economics, Energy Economics and Applied Financial Economics. His research interests are corporate finance, industrial organization, and derivatives pricing.Professor Chang’s recent new book: The Ownership of the Firm, Corporate Finance, and Derivatives: Some Critical Thinking, Springer, New York, 2015, clarifies the errors and misinterpretations in the literature. | |||
报告内容提要 | |||
This paper has proposed new option Greeks and new upper and lower bounds for European and American options. It also shows that because of the put-call parity, the Greeks of put and call options are interconnected and should be shown simultaneously. In terms of the theory of the firm, it is found that both the Black-Scholes-Merton and the binomial option pricing models implicitly assume that maximizing the market value of the firm is not equivalent to maximizing the equityholders’ wealth. The binomial option pricing model implicitly assumes that further increasing (decreasing) the promised payment to debtholders affects neither the speed of decreasing (increasing) in the equity nor the speed of increasing (decreasing) in the insurance for the promised payment. The Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model, on the other hand, implicitly assumes that further increasing (decreasing) in the promised payment to debtholders will: (1) decrease (increase) the speed of decreasing (increasing) in the equity though bounded by upper and lower bounds, and (2) increase (decrease) the speed of increasing (decreasing) in the insurance though bounded by upper and lower bounds. The paper also extends the put-call parity to include senior debt and convertible bond. It is found that when the promised payment to debtholders is approaching the market value of the firm and the risk-free interest rate is small, both the owner of the equity and the owner of the insurance will be more reluctant to liquidate the firm. The lower bound for the risky debt is: the promised payment to debtholders is greater or equal to the market value of the firm times one plus the risk-free interest rate.
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